Polar Regions in the Earth System
The PolarRES project will provide fresh insights into key local-regional scale physical and chemical processes for atmosphere-ocean-ice interactions in the Arctic and Antarctic.
Role: Author
Ph.D., professor
Vladimir's research interests include environmental fluid dynamics, computational fluid dynamics, physical oceanography, coastal engineering, and pollution transport and fate.
Vladimir is the Head of the Department of Modeling of Marine and River Systems at the Institute of Mathematical Machines and Systems Problems. His interests are related to physical oceanography (regional circulation models), environmental fluid mechanics (e.g., oil spills, cooling water problems, sediment transport), and the dispersion and fate of radioactivity in the marine environment.
From 1971 to 1974, Vladimir graduated from the Hydrometeorological Center of the USSR. Already in 1975, he held a position at the Institute of Hydromechanics of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine: from 1975 to 1980 as a junior researcher, from 1980 to 1990 as a senior researcher, and from 1990 to 1996 as head of the Laboratory of Internal Waves and Turbulence.
Vladimir has worked at the Institute of Mathematical Machines and Systems of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine since 1996. He has been the Head of the Department of Modeling of Marine and River Systems since 1996 and has worked as a Chief Researcher since 2016.
From 1999 to 2008, Vladimir was the Ukrainian Center for Environmental and Water Projects Director. From 2005 to 2008, he worked as a professor at the Department of Environmental Sciences at Hankuk University of Foreign Languages. In 2008, Vladimir became the Chairman of the Ukrainian Center for Environmental and Water Projects Advisory Board.
In addition, Vladimir became a member of the editorial board of the journal Mathematical Machines and Systems in 1998 and a member of the editorial board of the Ukrainian Antarctic Journal in 2008.
Volodymyr is also a reviewer for many scientific journals: "Fluid Physics," "Nonlinear Problems of Geophysics," "Environmental Fluid Mechanics," "Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts, Journal of Hydrology, etc.